Quote Originally Posted by Gemina View Post
My concern is towards the dev team and their decision making process. I'm not talking just the bunny attire, I'm talking any time they reverse a previous decision after taking a stance on it. I just use the bunny attire because it's a shining example of it. The description of the gear clearly implies that they didn't really want to do it, but they did it anyway, and player demand is very likely why that decision was made. If the bunny attire was initially made for both genders, I wouldn't have anywhere near the same issue with male players wearing it. I would still think they look stupid, but I digress.
You do realize people can change their minds over time, yes? Furthermore, admitting they weren't comfortable porting it to males isn't "taking a stance." It's stating an opinion—one they evidently opted against due to player demand. Which brings us to another point. Why wouldn't they base their decisions on player demand, at least to an extent? If enough people want something, it only makes sense for a business to provide it to them. The fact you claim they're catering to an agenda or the lowest common denominator speaks more about you than them, if I'm to be blunt. You've essentially implied the lowest common denominator are people wanting more inclusive options for their glamour; glamour that is all about individual and subjective expression.

Quote Originally Posted by Gemina View Post
No, my stance is dev decisions directly affects the quality of the playerbase, and the quality of the playerbase can indeed affect my experience in game. This holds true for everyone, including you.
How? How does my glamour decision, yours or anyone else's impact someone else? If they're "triggered" because I opt to wear a bunny suit or put my Hrothgar in dress, they can jump in a lake for all I care. If you mean to imply that by catering to the "lowest common denominator" this will invariably mean the devs cater in other ways too. Then you're lumping two very different arguments together in a way that simply doesn't work. No matter how you slice it, this is a poor hill to die on.